March 9, 2022
Hi Friend,

This past week of warm, wet weather has had us on the lookout for amphibian activity. Any day now, BEAT's amphibian crossing brigade will set out on a warm, rainy night to help migrating salamanders and frogs across roads all through Berkshire County. Want to take part in this exciting Big Night? Let us know, and we'll keep you in the loop!

Also, next Tuesday at 6 PM, we will be hosting our March Pittsfield Green Drinks gathering. Zach Adams, a full-time teacher naturalist for Mass Audubon, will talk about how to deepen your experience in nature, be respectful while doing so, and about all of the work that goes into making Mass Audubon Wildlife Sanctuaries amazing places for humans, wildlife, and the ecosystem! You can RSVP here. We hope to see you there!


Thanks for all you do to protect the environment!
Jane, Rose, Jake, Noah, and Chelsey
IN THE NEWS
State gives waterworks warning over compound in Housatonic drinking water linked to cancer

Heather Bellow | The Berkshire Eagle
"The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection has ordered the Housatonic Water Works Co. to present by April 4 a proposal for reducing levels of a disinfectant byproduct linked to cancer in its drinking water. [...] In the third and fourth quarters of 2021, the company reported elevated levels of haloacetic acid, a chlorine byproduct also known as HAA5. And it neglected to notify the public of some of these test results within the required 30 days. In addition, the company was late with some reports to the DEP. [...] The problem is the latest to roil the waterworks and its customers. Periodic bouts of discolored water and sediment have frustrated customers over the past decade. Pressed by residents, town officials are considering a takeover of the company, and residents are asking top state officials for help, including Gov. Charlie Baker." Read More
BIPOC Forest Bathing Immersion

The Rusty Anvil
"The 2022 BIPOC Forest Bathing immersion is for aspiring, beginner, and experienced backpackers in the Northeast to connect to wild spaces while learning basic backcountry skills. By the end of this 4-day program, you will know how to pack your own pack, set up your tent, identify trees and plants, practice ancestral living skills such as making cordage and fire by friction, and engage in group activities that heighten your awareness of the natural world. Our intention is to empower you to feel equipped with the knowledge you need to take your own wilderness trips and offer an opportunity to connect with nature in a safe and non-competitive space with other BIPOC folks." Learn More
Incentives inform and inspire highly efficient affordable housing in Massachusetts

Sarah Shemkus | Energy News
"A pair of statewide incentive programs in Massachusetts is driving a surge of apartment buildings designed to the highly energy-efficient passive house standard. In the past year, families have moved into 257 affordable housing units in complexes built to the standard, and about 6,000 additional units are now in various stages of development. Early numbers indicate that this building approach costs, on average, less than 3% more than conventional construction and can slash energy use roughly in half. Air quality is higher in these buildings and residents report the units being more comfortable to live in. Many developers who have tried passive house building have been so pleased with the benefits for residents that they are eager to pursue more projects built to the standard. [...] In 2018, the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center stepped in with a grant program aimed at easing these financial concerns. The Passive House Design Challenge awarded eight affordable housing developments $4,000 per unit — for a total of $1.73 million — for new construction built to the passive house standard. [...] Then, in July 2019, Mass Save, the organization that administers the utilities’ legally mandated energy efficiency programs, launched its own passive house incentives." Read More
Fear for bees as US set to extend use of toxic pesticides that paralyse insects

Oliver Milman | The Guardian
"...The EPA is widely expected to confirm a proposed plan outlined last year that will extend the use of imidacloprid, thiamethoxam, clothianidin, and dinotefuran on US farmland for the next 15 years, even though the agency has noted 'ecological risks of concern, particularly to pollinators and aquatic invertebrates'. These four insecticides are all types of neonicotinoids, a class of chemicals that is widely used on crops to treat them for pests but has been found to cause devastation among non-target insects, such as bees. The chemicals assault receptors in an insect’s nerve synapse, causing uncontrollable shaking, paralysis, and death. Neonicotinoids are used across 150m acres of American cropland, an area roughly the size of Texas, and have contributed to the land becoming 48 times more toxic than it was a quarter of a century ago. The chemicals are water soluble and quickly leach out of plants into soils and streams, causing such harmful impacts to wildlife that Canada has restricted their use while the EU has banned the outdoor deployment of clothianidin, imidacloprid, and thiamethoxam. [...] Neonicotinoids also harm birds, studies have shown, while their benefits are questionable, with crop yields in many cases not improved by the indiscriminate use of the chemicals." See Infographics & Read More
Push to Protect Pollinators Starts at Home

Frank Carini | ecoRI News
"As the late biologist and naturalist Edward O. Wilson once said about these vital invertebrates: 'If all mankind were to disappear, the world would regenerate back to the rich state of equilibrium that existed ten thousand years ago. If insects were to vanish, the environment would collapse into chaos.' [...] More than 40 percent of insect species are declining and a third are endangered, with butterflies and moths among the worst hit, according to the 2019 peer-reviewed scientific paper published in the journal Biological Conservation. The study noted that intensive agriculture is the main driver of insect decline, particularly the overuse of pesticides. Development and the climate crisis only serve to accelerate their demise. [...] While many home gardeners want to help support pollinator biodiversity, Gegear noted data are still being gathered to inform them on what they should be planting, especially when it comes to attracting bumblebees. The Beecology Project has already provided some answers. Using eight years of live surveys, observations, and other research techniques — much of it obtained on a 40-acre parcel of conserved land in Southborough and at Gegear’s outside laboratory in Dartmouth — the UMass professor and his team have created a list of native plants that support local bumblebee species at risk, as well as other bee species and butterflies. (The list is for Massachusetts, but Gegear said it can also be mostly applied to Rhode Island and Connecticut.)" Read More
Magpies remove tracking devices for each other in rare acts of altruism

Nick Lavars | New Atlas
"Lightweight and sophisticated tracking devices have made it possible to study the behavior of birds in all kinds of useful ways, for example, helping keep them safe from ships or monitoring their changing migration patterns in a warming world. For a research team in Australia, however, these efforts haven't quite gone to plan, with a group of tagged magpies promptly removing each other's tracking devices in a previously unsighted display of altruism. [...] Within 10 minutes of fitting the final tracker, the team watched on as an adult female used her bill to remove the harness from a younger bird in the group. A few hours on, most of the other trackers had been removed. By day three, they were all gone. It's unclear whether one bird was helping out all the others, or if they shared the unclipping responsibilities between the group, but this is the first instance the scientists know of where birds have cooperated to remove tracking devices, and the first example of altruism in magpies." Read More
The Splendor of Birdsong

Chris Rimmer | Northern Woodlands
"From the first harsh (but oh-so-welcome) kong-ga-ree of a red-winged blackbird as early as late February, to the complex and voluptuous harmonic of a wood thrush in mid-May, our northern forest airwaves are dominated by birdsong in spring. The resurgence of vocal behavior by both returning migrants and hardy year-round residents revives our senses and stirs our souls. No other animal group on the planet produces as many diverse and complex sounds – both vocal and non-vocal – as birds (although amphibians come close). [...] Whether woodcock, warbler, or wren, produced vocally or not, birdsong adds a layer of lushness to our northern landscape in spring. We mark time by the return of singing birds, delighting as the earliest announce themselves, exulting as the full symphony unfolds. Their chorus is truly among the greatest of nature’s many marvels." Read More
Carbon Capture Takes Center Stage, But Is Its Promise an Illusion?

Nicholas Kusnetz | Inside Climate News
"With his climate agenda stalled in Congress, President Joe Biden has managed to win billions in federal spending for one pillar of his platform that is gaining increased attention globally: carbon capture. In a major win for oil, coal, utilities, and other industries, the federal government is poised to make its largest investment ever—more than $12 billion from last year’s infrastructure bill—in technologies that capture carbon dioxide from smokestack emissions or straight from the air. [...] [Supporters'] arguments have won unprecedented spending on carbon capture over the past year, with governments in EuropeCanada, and Australia also committing billions in subsidies. Proponents say all this funding could prove transformative and, within a decade, could help cut hundreds of millions of metric tons of pollution annually. But many progressive climate groups like Greenpeace and 350.org say oil companies are promoting the technologies as a distraction to avoid phasing out their products. At best, they argue, carbon capture and removal will play a marginal role in limiting emissions. At worst, they warn, subsidies for the technologies will prolong demand for fossil fuels, squandering money that would be better spent on replacing coal, oil, and gas altogether. While the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said in 2018 that carbon capture and removal technologies may be critical to limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit), it also said that carbon removal, in particular, remains unproven and that relying on it posed “a major risk” to meeting climate targets. Carbon capture prevents emissions, by pulling them out of smokestacks, while carbon removal refers to processes that suck the gas from the atmosphere." Read More
U.N. adopts historic resolution aimed at ending plastic pollution

Tik Root | Washington Post
"For the first time, the international community has agreed on a framework to curb the world’s growing plastic problem. A resolution adopted Wednesday by the United Nations lays out an ambitious plan for developing a legally binding treaty to 'end plastic pollution.' [...] Wednesday’s resolution came on the third day of the biennial U.N. Environment Assembly in Nairobi, where more than 150 countries are represented. It calls for the creation of an intergovernmental negotiating committee to hash out details of a treaty by the end of 2024. [...] Getting from resolution to treaty will not be easy. [...] The U.N. negotiating committee will have a multitude of specifics to wade through in a relatively short time. Among the many items, any treaty will have to tackle reporting standards, financing mechanisms, and, perhaps the thorniest issue, plastic production." Read More
How to get past despair and take powerful action on climate change

Thomas S. Bateman and Michael E. Mann | Fast Company
"Our species is in a race with climate change, and a lot of people want to know, 'Can I really make a difference?' The question concerns what’s known as agency. Its meaning is complex, but in a nutshell, it means being able to do what you set out to do and believing you can succeed. How well people exercise their agency will determine the severity of global warming—and its consequences. [...] Despite abundant technical agency, humanity is alarmingly short of psychological agency: belief in one’s personal ability to help. A 10-country-survey study in The Lancet, a British medical journal, found that more than half of young people ages 16 to 25 feel afraid, sad, anxious, angry, powerless, and helpless about climate change. [...] A key part of agency is one’s belief, when faced with a task to perform, a situation to manage, or a long-term goal like protecting the climate, that “I can do this.” It’s known as self-efficacy. [...] With climate change, a high sense of self-efficacy strengthens a person’s willingness to reduce carbon emissions (mitigation) and prepare for climate-related disasters (adaptation). Studies confirm this for actions including volunteering, donating, contacting elected officials, saving energy, conserving water during extreme weather, and more. [...] Individual agency should be seen as a gateway for group efforts that can more quickly and effectively change the trajectory of climate change." Read More
Six key lifestyle changes can help avert the climate crisis, study finds

Matthew Taylor | The Guardian
"People in well-off countries can help avert climate breakdown by making six relatively straightforward lifestyle changes, according to research from three leading institutions. [...] The research carried out by academics at Leeds University and analysed by experts at the global engineering firm Arup and the C40 group of world cities, found that making the six commitments could account for a quarter of the emissions reductions required to keep the global heating down to 1.5C. [...] 'The research is clear that governments and the private sector have the largest role to play but it is also equally clear from our analysis that individuals and communities can make a huge difference.' The Jump campaign asks people to sign up to take the following six “shifts” for one, three, or six months: (1) Eat a largely plant-based diet, with healthy portions and no waste; (2) Buy no more than three new items of clothing per year; (3) Keep electrical products for at least seven years; (4) Take no more than one short-haul flight every three years and one long haul flight every eight years; (5) Get rid of personal motor vehicles if you can – and if not keep hold of your existing vehicle for longer; (6) Make at least one life shift to nudge the system, like moving to a green energy, insulating your home or changing pension supplier." Read More
COMMUNITY CALENDAR 
We list events from a variety of local and regional organizations and individuals. 
 

Events with BEAT:

TUESDAY, MARCH 15 

SATURDAY, MARCH 19

Community Calendar

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9

THURSDAY, MARCH 10

FRIDAY, MARCH 11
Many Forks Farm Plant Sale - Sale ends on March 15

SATURDAY, MARCH 12

SUNDAY, MARCH 13

MONDAY, MARCH 14

TUESDAY, MARCH 15

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16


JOBS
We list jobs related to the environment from a variety of organizations. 
 

Stewardship Field Assistant | The Nature Conservancy | Great Barrington | 3/13
Stewardship Field Assistant | The Nature Conservancy | Sheffield | 3/13
BerkShares Outreach Coordinators (2 positions) | Schumacher Center for a New Economics | Pittsfield or North Adams | deadline 3/16
River Steward — Paid Internship | Housatonic Valley Association (HVA) | deadline 3/31
Housatonic Valley Association (HVA) | Stockbridge
High Road Manager | Berkshire Natural Resources Council | Hybrid/Berkshires
Stream Crew Members (3 positions) | Greenagers | South Egremont
Part-Time Summer Land Management Internship | MountainStar Forest and Eagle Eye Institute | Peru, MA
Pittsfield Energy Advocate (part-time) | Ener-G-Save | Pittsfield
Conservation Technician | Housatonic Valley Association (HVA) | Stockbridge
Administrative and Marketing Manager | Nonprofit Center of the Berkshires | Great Barrington
Administrative Manager | Nonprofit Center of the Berkshires | Great Barrington
Marketing and Communications Manager | Nonprofit Center of the Berkshires | Great Barrington
Director of Development | Grow Food Northampton | Northampton | deadline 3/11/
Conservation Science & Land Steward | Linda Loring Nature Foundation | Nantucket | deadline 3/18
Beyond Plastics Campaign Associate | U.S. PIRG | Boston | deadline 3/18
Adventure Trips Director | YMCA Camp Burgess & Hayward | Sandwich | deadline 3/18
Adventure Trip Leader | Camp Burgess & Hayward | Sandwich | deadline 3/18
Spring Outdoor Educator | Camp Burgess & Hayward | Cape Cod | deadline 3/18
Indisposable Communities Policy & Engagement Officer | Upstream | Flexible within the U.S. | deadline 3/18
Canvass Field Manager | Fund for the Public Interest | Boston | deadline 3/25
River Internships Summer 2022 | Wild & Scenic Westfield River Committee | Westfield | deadline 3/25
Vice President of Administration & Finance | Buzzards Bay Coalition | New Bedford | deadline 3/28
Park Ranger | Rose Kennedy Greenway Conservancy | Boston | deadline 3/31
Environmental Field Organizer | Green Corps | Amherst | deadline 3/31
Summer Ranger Manager | Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank | Edgartown | deadline 3/31
Seasonal Trail Crew | Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank | Edgartown | deadline 3/31
Grants Specialist | Massachusetts Division of Ecological Restoration | Boston | deadline 3/31
Fiscal Coordinator | Massachusetts Division of Ecological Restoration | Boston | deadline 3/31
Managing Director — Flyways Program | Manomet, Inc. | Plymouth | deadline 3/31
Visitor Services Fellow — USFWS North Atlantic-Appalachian Regional Office | American Conservation Experience | Hadley | deadline 3/31
Learnership/Student Internship in Field Botany & Native Plant Gardening | Farmscape Ecology Program – Hawthorne Valley Farm | Ghent, NY
Summer Experience Studying Insects on Farm | Farmscape Ecology Program – Hawthorne Valley Farm | Ghent, NY
EPA Student Interns | New England Regional Office of the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Summer Program Instructor | Kestrel Educational Adventure | Hamilton


***Are you a non-profit environmental organization looking for willing, capable, and *free* summer interns? 
The Center for Environmental Studies at Williams College provides funding to students to pursue unpaid environmental summer internships with non-profit organizations and governmental agencies, supervised research, and creative endeavors. Learn more about this summer program and how you can get involved here.


Environmental Monitor
February 23, 2022

The Environmental Monitor provides information on projects under review by the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act (MEPA) office, recent MEPA decisions of the Secretary of Energy & Environmental Affairs, and public notices from environmental agencies.
 
Berkshire Index:
Becket – Notice of Application for a 401 Water Quality Certificate (click on the link, then at the top, click on attachments) – Route 8 bridge over Shaker Mill Brook – posted 2/9/22
Multiple municipalities – Notice of Submission of a Yearly Operational Plan (click on the link, then at the top, click on attachments)  Eversource Energy Vegetation Management – posted 2/9/2022

Pioneer Valley Index:
Goshen - Notice of Application for a 401 Water Quality Certificate (click on the link, then at the top, click on attachments) - Route 9 Bridge over Stones Brook - posted 2/23/22
Holyoke - Notice of Application for a 401 Water Quality Certificate (click on the link, then at the top, click on attachments) - Whiting Street Reservoir Dam Improvements - posted 2/23/22
Chicopee – Notice of Project Change – Pilot Travel Center (aka Chicopee Hotel Redevelopment) – comments due 3/1/22
Multiple municipalities – Notice of Submission of a Yearly Operational Plan (click on the link, then at the top, click on attachments) – Eversource Energy Vegetation Management – posted 2/9/2022
 
Statewide Index:
Notice of Public Hearing re: Vegetation Management Plan - Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co. (click on link, then attachments tab) - Public Hearing 4/7/22
Public Notices
Public Notices listed here are from a variety of sources, from town conservation commissions and select boards to state and federal agencies. These listings are for Berkshire, Hampshire, Hampden, and Franklin counties. Listings are only posted if they are environmental in nature. You can find all public notices for Massachusetts here
Berkshire Environmental Action Team
20 Chapel St., Pittsfield, MA 01201
(413) 464-9402
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